The L.A.-based label, once touted as ‘the Motown of the ’80s,’ was established in the 1970s as an outgrowth of the TV variety show ‘Soul Train.’ The label put out some of the biggest hits of the 1980s. Richard “Dick” Griffey, founder of the Los Angeles-based R&B record label Solar, which was once touted as “the Motown of the ’80s,” has died. He was 71.Go to Source

The L.A.-based label, once touted as ‘the Motown of the ’80s,’ was established in the 1970s as an outgrowth of the TV variety show ‘Soul Train.’ The label put out some of the biggest hits of the 1980s. Richard “Dick” Griffey, founder of the Los Angeles-based R&B record label Solar, which was once touted as “the Motown of the ’80s,” has died. He was 71.Go to Source

Skip It Nothing in the gaming world has made me so mad as the decline of the Guitar Hero franchise. Once a gaming stellar smash, adopted developer Neversoft (original developer Harmonix now makes the constantly improving Rock Band series) has beaten this franchise like the red-headed stepchild it should never have been. Despite inundating the market with increasingly pathetic titles, Neversoft …Go to Source

Guitar Hero: Warriors of Rock continues Activision’s long list of Guitar Hero sequels, but this one will be different according to Activision brand manager, Jonathan Edney, as reported by PlaystationLifestyle.net. Edney believes that “Warriors of Rock,” or simply known as Guitar Hero 6, will outsell Guitar Hero 5, which claimed the No. 1 selling spot in the UK upon its release. Here are a few of …Go to Source

Between its newfound focus on storytelling and its status as (gasp) the only Guitar Hero game out this calendar year, Warriors of Rock carried major promise to evolve the stubborn music franchise. Maybe you balked at the concept of a story-focused game featuring a cast of characters who have never spoken before , but at least storytelling represents a fairly unbeaten path in the increasingly …Go to Source

The L.A.-based label, once touted as ‘the Motown of the ’80s,’ was established in the 1970s as an outgrowth of the TV variety show ‘Soul Train.’ The label put out some of the biggest hits of the 1980s. Richard “Dick” Griffey, founder of the Los Angeles-based R&B record label Solar, which was once touted as “the Motown of the ’80s,” has died. He was 71.Go to Source